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Reaching

Commentary
In Hendrik Ibsen’s famous drama Peer Gynt, the hero of the story tries to find the meaning of his life by traveling and interviewing others. At one point he visits an asylum where “lunatics” are kept. Their craziness, thinks Peer Gynt, must arise from the condition that they are, as he puts it, “outside themselves.”

Not so, says the director of the asylum.

Outside themselves? Oh no, you’re wrong.
It’s here that men are most themselves—
Themselves and nothing but themselves—
Sailing with outspread sails of self.
Each shuts himself in a cask of self,
The cask stopped with a bung of self
And seasoned in a well of self.
None has a tear for others’ woes
Or cares what any other thinks.
We are ourselves in thought and voice!


That is the tendency within each of us—to become swallowed up with ourselves. Perhaps it is for that very reason that each of our lectionary readings for today focuses on finding meaning only beyond our limited introspections. The first sign of true mental and spiritual health is when we know that we are not the center of all things, and that there is a way of life and perception in which God and others truly matter.

2 Samuel 18:5-9, 15, 31-33
The demise of David’s reign is tied to a fascinating story that seems to be constantly repeated in political annals: an extramarital affair. Why would David do such a thing? Not just the romantic encounter itself, but the deliberately planned murder (engaging others of his trusted subordinates as willing or unwilling accomplices), the massive deceptions, the elaborate cover-ups, and even the personal delusions that kept him from seeing his own guilt.

Part of the answer has to be found in the very first verse of 2 Samuel 11: “In the spring, at the time when kings go off to war, David sent Joab out with the king’s men and the whole Israelite army … But David stayed in Jerusalem.” This hints at several things. First, the time of the year lent itself to surging hormones and amorous thoughts. After the months of terrestrial hibernation, the world around David was beginning to bloom, the days were getting warmer (Jerusalem sometimes gets snow in winter), both animals and plants were exercising their mating rituals, and along with them the human crowd in the palace and the capital city were showing signs of frisky behavior. There is good reason to celebrate Valentine’s Day in the spring, and David himself was a muscular male whose own body welcomed the virus of libido.

Second, David’s life was a runaway success. His early contestants to the throne of Israel had all been killed, defeated, or swept aside. David was at the top of the corporate ladder, with no immediate challengers in sight. His kingdom was consolidated, his enemies vanquished, his market share a supreme monopoly, his income substantial and rising, his palatial mansion finished, and his goals achieved. David was at the place in his career where “can’t” and “defeat” were no longer part of the vocabulary. What he wanted, he got. What he desired, he took. What he planned, happened. No questions asked. Winning a new territory or another heart were essentially the same: Get the idea and make it so.

Third, David had begun to isolate himself from the masses. He had the disease of wealthy insulation, where immediate consequences of actions cannot, and need not, be felt. The armies went off to war, but David stayed in Jerusalem. The workers buzzed about in their daily rituals, but he sat on the roof of his palace and surveyed the scene. Regular folks had to labor for a wage, but there was no schedule David had to keep. He could sleep or sneak or sulk or skulk or sidle or stroll at will. Adultery was at one time mainly the prerogative of the rich, simply because only they had the time and means. Mass transportation, suburban domestic isolation, and a culture of leisure dispense it liberally to all classes of society. But David lived in one of those eras when “fooling around” was a natural correlation to being rich and powerful.

These things come through in Nathan’s ingenious invective against his friend and lord. Telling a story of the difference in lifestyle between the uncaring and presumptive rich man and the tenderhearted poor fellow aggravated David, as it should have. But his self-deception was so great that he did not see himself in the mirror until Nathan bashed it against his psyche.

The outcome of David’s devious treachery would be family squabbles and the disruption of the monarchy for the rest of David’s life. David and Bathsheba’s first child would die, followed by the tragic demise of several other children, including Absalom’s challenging takeover. What made this rebellion so tragic for David is that David truly believed Absalom was his divinely endorsed successor. After all, Nathan the prophet had said that David could not build Yahweh’s permanent home, since he was a man of war; his son, however, a man of peace, would build Yahweh’s temple. Notice again Absalom’s name: it means “Father of Peace!” This is why David begged his generals to go easy on Absalom, and ordered them not to let Absalom die. But David was wrong. David himself would limp from the throne in his old age, barely keeping the restive kingdom alive.

Another son of peace (Solomon) would succeed David, and build the great temple. And, many centuries later, another son of David, a true man of peace, would rule the world with righteousness in a manner that truly brings peace.

Ephesians 4:25-5:2
Jesus is Lord of all, Paul fairly shouted at the beginning of this letter, producing wonderful new life in all who were part of the church (Ephesians 1). It is, in many respects, very similar to his letter to the Colossian congregation.

In place of Paul’s instructions about the false teaching at Colossae, there is a brief reminder that Jews and Gentiles are together on the same footing before God because of the powerful redemptive work of Jesus (Ephesians 2). As he began to celebrate this amazing grace of God through prayer (Ephesians 3:1), Paul interrupted himself, reminding his readers of the specific calling he had received to know and communicate this divine revelation (Ephesians 3:2–13). Then, Paul resumed his powerful and profound prayer of praise (Ephesians 3:14–21), and launched into an extended metaphor on what it means for the living body of Christ to function in a dark world (Ephesians 4:1–5:20). Very similar to his instructions in Colossians 3, Paul outlined specific behaviors that were expected in Christian households (Ephesians 5:21–6:9).

Paul’s letters from prison address a couple of life issues—the nature of the relationship between master and slave, for instance, when both are Christians, and a proper response to the false teaching that was being promulgated at Colossae. But mostly, these writings paint, in vibrant colors, the character of moral choices in a world that is compromised and broken. Darkness and light are the key metaphors. Evil has wrapped a blanket of pain and harm around all that takes place in the human arena. Jesus is the brilliant light of God, penetrating earth’s atmosphere with grace and reconciliation. Because of Jesus’ physical departure at the ascension, his followers now must step in and become a thousand million points of light, restoring relationships and renewing meaning. Jesus is great, and because of our connection with him, we can be great too. Not for our own sakes, of course, but as witnesses of the eschatological hope that tomorrow’s amazing future of God is something we already participate today. That is why Christianity is the religion of the dawn.

John 6:35, 41-51
Fred Craddock once flew to Winnipeg, Manitoba, to speak at a church conference. Unfortunately, his arrival coincided with the worst snowstorm of the decade. When no one picked him up at the airport, Fred found a taxi willing to brave the whiteouts and drifts in the drive required to get him to his motel. There a message awaited him; he was to call the man who booked him for the conference.

“I’m sorry, Fred,” said the man. “We didn’t count on this blizzard. We’ve had to cancel the conference. In fact, we’re so snowed in here at the church that we can’t even get out there to the motel to pick you up for a meal. You’re on your own.”

The motel was not all that great. It didn’t even have a restaurant. When Fred called the office to find directions to some food place nearby, a woman suggested the coffee shop at the bus depot. It was about a block and a half away. Battling gale force winds and stinging snow, it still took Fred twenty minutes to stumble over there.

The bus depot was dirty. The coffee shop was worse. Even so, an overflow crowd had taken refuge inside its steamy windows. Everyone seemed to know the plight of those who newly entered, for when Fred saw no seats open, kind strangers at a booth shoved over to make space. Soon he was eating a tasteless gray soup.

The door opened again. This time a woman struggled to find her way into the throng. Her lingered entry brought out the man with the greasy apron. “Hey!” he yelled. “Close that door! You’re letting all the cold air in here!”

Like Fred, the woman had to find sanctuary at a table of strangers. When the man with the greasy apron walked over and asked what she wanted, she asked for a glass of water. He returned and asked again, “What do you want?”

“The water will be fine,” she said.

“No,” replied the man. “What do you want to order from the menu?”

“I’m really not hungry,” she answered. “I’ll just stick with the water.”

“Look lady!” came the response. “We’ve got paying customers waiting! If you’re not going to order anything, you’ll have to get out!”

“Can’t I just stay a few minutes and get warmed up?” she asked.

“No way!” he said. “If you don’t want to order, you’ll have to leave!”

So the woman gathered herself and stood to make an exit. Of course, these two had gotten the attention of everyone in the room. As the woman rose, everyone noticed the men on either side of her pushing back their chairs and standing as well. And the men next to them. In a flash, everyone at that table stood and turned to leave, plates still bulging with food. Something like an electric current buzzed through the room, and all at once everyone else got up and moved toward the door.

he man with the greasy apron was startled. “All right! All right!” he said, motioning everyone to sit again. “She can stay!” He even brought her a bowl of soup.

As Fred turned back to his own bowl of broth he found that it tasted better than he remembered. In fact, it reminded him of something but he could not quite recall what. He turned to the stranger next to him and asked, “Do you know her?”

“No,” said the man. “Never saw her before. But if she can’t sit here to get warm, I wouldn’t want to stay in a place like this.”

As Fred paused to leave a short while later, it finally dawned on him that what he had been thinking about when the soup gained its taste was the last time he shared the sacrament of communion. Maybe these mixed strangers in search of shelter were only a pack of isolated bodies. But for a moment the spirit of Jesus warmed the air in the room and they breathed in something of the grace of God that can only come when we eat of his body and drink of his blood.

It sounds terrible to those who don’t understand. But most people get it. Because most of us truly need it.

Application
Mark Twain wrote that when he was fourteen he thought his father was an idiot. “But when I turned twenty-one,” he added, “I was amazed at how much the old man had learned in seven years!” Obviously, Twain himself had learned a thing or two by that time. One hopes we all will learn such things as time goes by.

The strangest thing about maturity is that it sneaks up on us best when we don’t pursue it overmuch. We can do little about age, but maturity comes quickest to those who do not wrestle it down. Malcolm Muggeridge said it beautifully in his own reflections on growing old. He told of nights when he found himself in bed, yet somehow suspended between this world and the next, sensing that things glow with the lights of Augustine’s City of God. His thoughts in that moment of quiet harmony were not about himself, he said, but rather about how wonderful it was to be alive and to know that all things come together and find their purpose in the hand of God.

It is when we reach for what truly matters that we live most truly as ourselves.

Alternative Application (Ephesians 4:25-5:2)
Generations ago, the English poet George Herbert penned a brilliant picture of the near-phantom connection that links us to God. In “The Pulley” he portrayed God at the moment of creation, sprinkling his new human creature with treasures kept in a jar beside him. These were God’s finest resources, given now as gifts to the crown of his universe: beauty, wisdom, honor, pleasure… All were scattered liberally in the genetic recipe of our kind.

When the jar of God’s treasures was nearly empty, God put the lid on it. The angels wondered why God did not finish the human concoction, leaving one great resource still in its container. This last quality, God told the angels, is “rest.” But God would not grant that divine treasure to the human race.

The angels, of course, asked why. Herbert was ready with the divine answer regarding the best mix for the human spirit:

Let him be rich and weary, that at least,
If goodness lead him not, yet weariness
May toss him to my breast.


Herbert saw well that the strong talents and marvelous abilities of humankind would make us like impatient children, eager to strike out on our own and find our self-made destinies. Only if God would hold back a sense of full satisfaction from our souls would we search our way back home.

When we use our abilities for our own ends, we tend to destroy what is best in ourselves and others. When, however, we are restless to find the face of God in the divine law’s mirror we find a glimpse of our own best faces reflected back toward us in smile of God’s.

George Matheson, the blind hymn writer, gave the same prayer to the church when he wrote:

Make me a captive, Lord, and then I shall be free.
Force me to render up my sword and I shall conqueror be.
I sink in life’s alarms when by myself I stand;
Imprison me within Thine arms and strong shall be my hand.


My will is not my own ‘til Thou hast made it Thine.
If it would reach a monarch’s throne it must its crown resign.
I only stand unbent amid the clashing strife
When on Thy bosom I have leaned and found in Thee my life.
UPCOMING WEEKS
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Emphasis Preaching Journal

Sandra Herrmann
Merry Christmas! The midwinter festival has come, and it calls for parties, feasting and drinking and dancing and the exchange of gifts. Like all people in the northern hemisphere, we need light in the dark days of winter. The only problem with all of this is that the pressure to be joyful can send us spiraling in the exact opposite of mind sets.
Christmas shops are not just for Christmas anymore. These stores that specialize in everything yuletide-ish do business year round and can be found everywhere. I have seen them in an outlet mall near Washington, D.C., nestled in a small village in the mountains of North Carolina and adorning the white sand beaches of the Alabama Gulf Coast.

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Call to Worship:

Jesus is born! A bright light has come into our world, so let us thank and praise God for his gift to us of Jesus, the Messiah.

Invitation to Confession:

Lord Jesus, we are thrilled by your birth, make us worthy to worship at your crib.

Lord, have mercy.

Lord Jesus, we are thrilled by your birth, may we remember you in today's excitement.

Christ, have mercy.

Lord Jesus, we are thrilled by your birth, be born in our hearts today.

Lord, have mercy

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John E. Sumwalt And Jo Perry-sumwalt
Contents
A Story to Live By: "
Christmas Stories: "Christmas Presence" by Janice Hammerquist
"Silver In His Soul"
"www.ChristmasHouse" by John Sumwalt
Scrap Pile: Great Prayer of Thanksgiving for Christmas Eve by Thom M. Shuman


What's Up on Christmas Eve

Lamar Massingill
John E. Sumwalt
Contents
"Taking His Joy unto Ourselves" by Lamar Massingill
"God Acted that We Might Act" by Lamar Massingill
"The Hopes and Fears of All the Years" by John Sumwalt
"God with Us" by Peter Andrew Smith


* * * * * * * *


Taking His Joy unto Ourselves
Lamar Massingill
Luke 2:1-14 (15-20)

Christmas would be incomplete without recognizing Incarnate Love's first fruit, which is joy. Johann Sebastian Bach recognized it when he, as an act of worship, composed "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring."

SermonStudio

John R. Brokhoff
THE LESSONS

Lesson 1: Isaiah 9:2--7 (C, RC); Isaiah 9:2--4, 6--7 (E)
Mark Wm. Radecke
Year after year, we are drawn to this night: This night with its carols, its candlelight, its communion, and the combined fragrance of pine, poinsettia and perfume. (Is that Passion or Poison you're wearing? Or maybe it's Polo!) The gentle poetry of Luke's story draws us, too.

Why is it that we are so drawn to this night, I wonder? There are, I suppose, as many answers as there are people in this room.
Charles L. Aaron, Jr.
It's not an easy life, I'll tell you that. I work my small farm during the day, but that doesn't bring in enough money. I have a family to support, taxes to pay -- oy, don't get me started on taxes -- so I need more than my farm brings in. I do the only other thing I know how to do. I hire myself out for the night shift watching other people's sheep. Tending sheep would not be my first choice, you understand. First, I have to stay awake all night. Then, there's counting the sheep to make sure one or two haven't wandered off. Thieves are always a problem.
Timothy J. Smith
There is a special feeling from being in church on Christmas Eve. For many of us it feels like coming home for Christmas. We come to hear the familiar story of Mary and Joseph making their way to the little town of Bethlehem. We hear once again of Baby Jesus born in stable. Soon after an unexpected encounter with angels, the shepherds head to the manger to see Jesus for themselves. Children have creatively acted out this story for generations complete with the wise men offering their gifts. Living Nativities complete with live animals are portrayed in church parking lots in many communities.
Frank Luchsinger
"The grace of God has appeared ... training us ... to await our blessed hope" (Titus 2:11-13), and oh, how we have waited! The air is filled with anticipation, the Holy Night has come. We each wait for different things: the lighting of candles, the singing of carols, loved ones returning home, feasting, and forgetting ferment, for the Prince of Peace is coming. We wait for delight in the eyes of someone we love as he or she opens that special gift. We wait in awe in the hope that one star's strong light lingers still and will lead us home to him who redeems us.
John B. Jamison
He stood on the steps and waved. He nodded to those cheering to him from below, and took a deep breath as if to soak up their praise.
Susan R. Andrews
At the risk of putting you to sleep, I'd like to ask each one of you to close your eyes. Right now, for just a minute. Please close your eyes. And now imagine with me. Imagine that you are holding a newborn baby. Imagine how this baby feels - skin touching skin, curves touching curves - harmonious heartbeats as life surges between you. Imagine the smell - the earthy sweetness of breath and body perfuming the air. Imagine the sound - the silent melody of sighing, stretching, settling. Right now, for just a minute, let your imagination go. Feel the baby. Smell the baby. Hear the baby.
Amy C. Schifrin
Martha Shonkwiler
Gathering
P: Born into this world,
C: born into our lives,
P: God made flesh.
C: O Emmanuel, we praise you now and forever. Amen.

Hymn Of Praise
O Come, All Ye Faithful or Jesus, What A Wonderful Child

Gospel Procession
Have the children (dressed as Mary, Joseph, and the shepherds) process and then read the gospel from the center of the congregation.

Intercessory Prayers
After each petition:
L: O God of love,
C: be born in us today.
Beverly S. Bailey
Hymns
O Sing A New Song To The Lord (PH216)
Angels From The Realms Of Glory (UM220, PH22, NCH126)
Born In The Night (PH30, NCH152)
Once In Royal David's City (PH49, UM250, NCH145)
The First Nowell (PH56, UM245, CBH199, NCH139)
On This Day Earth Shall Ring (UM248, PH46, CBH192)
What Child Is This? (UM219, PH53, CBH215, NCH148)
Silent Night (PH60, UM229, CBH193, PH134)
The Friendly Beasts (UM227, NCH138)
That Boy--Child Of Mary (PH55, UM241)
Frank Ramirez
Call To Worship (based on Isaiah 9:2-7)

One:
The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light -

All:
Those who lived in a land of deep darkness - on them light has shone.

Women:
You have multiplied the nation, you have increased its joy; they rejoice before you as with joy at the harvest, as people exult when dividing plunder.

Men:
For a child has been born for us, a son given to us; authority rests upon his shoulders -

CSSPlus

Merry Christmas, boys and girls. (Show one of your signs). Do any of you know what this sign means? (Let them answer.) That's right, it means (provide answer). (Show another sign and ask what it means. Let them answer.) Very good. Signs are very important aren't they? They give us direction. They tell us what to do and what not to do. The Bible gives many signs also.

You all know the story about the shepherds on Christmas Eve. The shepherds were in the field watching their sheep. Suddenly an angel appeared to them. The Bible says that the shepherds
Leah Thompson
For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation to all… (v. 11)

Good morning, boys and girls! How are you today? (allow answers) Who can tell me what today is? (allow answers) That's right -- it's finally here! Today is Christmas [Eve]! We have spent the whole season of Advent preparing for right now. The long preparation is finally over. Christmas is here!

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